IPL 2021 organisers may have tweaked few things: Cummins

IPL 2021 was indefinitely suspended on Tuesday, following multiple COVID-19 cases inside the bio-bubble. Cummins made the comments before the league was called off.

Published : May 05, 2021 13:00 IST , Melbourne

KKR fast bowler Pat Cummins participated in IPL 2021, which was suspended on Tuesday.
KKR fast bowler Pat Cummins participated in IPL 2021, which was suspended on Tuesday.
lightbox-info

KKR fast bowler Pat Cummins participated in IPL 2021, which was suspended on Tuesday.

Australia pacer Pat Cummins feels the IPL organisers, in hindsight, would have "tweaked a few things" after deciding to host the league in India amidst a raging COVID-19 pandemic.

Cummins, a key part of the Kolkata Knight Riders team, said the previous edition held in UAE was incredibly "well-run" and the organisers pushed it a "little step further" by organising it at home this year.

The IPL was indefinitely suspended on Tuesday, following multiple COVID-19 cases inside the bio-bubble.

Last year, IPL was first postponed and then shifted to the UAE with India being in the grips of the first wave of the virus.

 

"Last year we had the IPL held over in the UAE and that was an incredibly well-run tournament," Cummins told  Foxsports.

"This year, they tried to push it that little step further and have it over here in multiple cities in India. I'm sure looking back they might have tweaked a few things."

 

His comments were made before the IPL was suspended on Tuesday.

The decision was taken after the virus breached the bio-bubble, infecting Sunrisers Hyderabad batsman Wriddhiman Saha, Delhi Capitals' spinner Amit Mishra and KKR's Varun Chakravarthy and Sandeep Warrier.

Chennai Super Kings' bowling coach L Balaji was also among the prominent non-playing staff to test positive and later it emerged that batting coach Michael Hussey also returned positive for COVID-19.

 

There was a lot of criticism for conducting the T20 league at a time when India was facing such a devastating health crisis.

"It's two different worlds. We're lucky, we're safe, we're comfortable and there's people just trying to get basic medical treatment," the Australian vice-captain said.

"First thing was to find out whether us playing the IPL was the right thing and basically everyone said, we would be lost without the IPL for three or four hours every night. I'm just trying to do my bit. India's been such a good country to me and cricketers." 

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment